» Articles » PMID: 37726708

Relationship Between Systolic Blood Pressure and Mortality in Older Vs Younger Trauma Patients - a Retrospective Multicentre Observational Study

Overview
Journal BMC Emerg Med
Publisher Biomed Central
Specialty Emergency Medicine
Date 2023 Sep 19
PMID 37726708
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: The population of older trauma patients is increasing. Those patients have heterogeneous presentations and need senior-friendly triaging tools. Systolic blood pressure (SBP) is commonly used to assess injury severity, and some authors advocated adjusting SBP threshold for older patients. We aimed to describe and compare the relationship between mortality and SBP in older trauma patients and their younger counterparts.

Methods: We included patients admitted to three level-I trauma centres and performed logistic regressions with age and SBP to obtain mortality curves. Multivariable Logistic regressions were performed to measure the association between age and mortality at different SBP ranges. Subgroup analyses were conducted for major trauma and severe traumatic brain injury admissions.

Results: A total of 47,661 patients were included, among which 12.9% were aged 65-74 years and 27.3% were ≥ 75 years. Overall mortality rates were 3.9%, 8.1%, and 11.7% in the groups aged 16-64, 65-74, and ≥ 75 years, respectively. The relationship between prehospital SBP and mortality was nonlinear (U-shape), mortality increased with each 10 mmHg SBP decrement from 130 to 50 mmHg and each 10-mmHg increment from 150 to 220 mmHg across all age groups. Older patients were at higher odd for mortality in all ranges of SBP. The highest OR in patients aged 65-74 years was 3.67 [95% CI: 2.08-6.45] in the 90-99 mmHg SBP range and 7.92 [95% CI: 5.13-12.23] for those aged ≥ 75 years in the 100-109 mmHg SBP range.

Conclusion: The relationship between SBP and mortality is nonlinear, regardless of trauma severity and age. Older age was associated with a higher odd of mortality at all SBP points. Future triage tools should therefore consider SBP as a continuous rather than a dichotomized predictor.

Citing Articles

TERMINAL-24 Score in Predicting Early and In-hospital Mortality of Trauma Patients; a Cross-sectional.

Ashrafian Fard S, Ahmadi S, Ebrahimi Bakhtavar H, Sadeghi Bazargani H, Rahmani F Arch Acad Emerg Med. 2025; 13(1):e25.

PMID: 39958961 PMC: 11829243. DOI: 10.22037/aaemj.v13i1.2526.


The Patterns and Quality of Acute Trauma Care in A University Hospital - A 5-year Analysis.

Bamalan O, Alshaikhi A, Alosaimi N, Nabri M, Osman A, Alsadery H Med Arch. 2025; 78(3):226-231.

PMID: 39944199 PMC: 11813216. DOI: 10.5455/medarh.2024.78.226-231.

References
1.
Bradburn E, Rogers F, Krasne M, Rogers A, Horst M, Beelen M . High-risk geriatric protocol: improving mortality in the elderly. J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2012; 73(2):435-40. DOI: 10.1097/TA.0b013e31825c7cf4. View

2.
Ichwan B, Darbha S, Shah M, Thompson L, Evans D, Boulger C . Geriatric-specific triage criteria are more sensitive than standard adult criteria in identifying need for trauma center care in injured older adults. Ann Emerg Med. 2014; 65(1):92-100.e3. DOI: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2014.04.019. View

3.
Reynolds P, Song K, Tamariz F, Barbee R . Hypertension and vulnerability to hemorrhagic shock in a rat model. Shock. 2014; 43(2):148-56. DOI: 10.1097/SHK.0000000000000275. View

4.
OConnor A . Interpretation of odds and risk ratios. J Vet Intern Med. 2013; 27(3):600-3. DOI: 10.1111/jvim.12057. View

5.
Jiang L, Zheng Z, Zhang M . The incidence of geriatric trauma is increasing and comparison of different scoring tools for the prediction of in-hospital mortality in geriatric trauma patients. World J Emerg Surg. 2020; 15(1):59. PMC: 7574576. DOI: 10.1186/s13017-020-00340-1. View